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The Canadian Press
The Canadian Press
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Video plans & items as of 5:30 p.m. ET Thursday, Feb. 3

Here are the latest video plans & items as of 5:30 p.m. ET Thursday, Feb. 3, 2022

For editorial questions regarding video today, please contact the photo desk at pixdesk(at)thecanadianpress.com

For questions about accessing video in the CP Images web platform, please contact info(at)cpimages.ca

For technical support, please call our 24/7 help desk at 1-800-268-8149 or 416-507-2099

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Coming up later (subject to change on availability): 

OTTAWA _ Coverage of the truck protest convoy on Parliament Hill. (video as available)

OTTAWA _ Question Period in the House of Commons. (on merit, this afternoon)

COUTTS, Alta. _ Blockade at a U.S. border crossing in protest against vaccine mandates. (expected next)

 

Sent previously:

Military response to Ottawa protest ‘not in the cards,’ Trudeau says, urging caution

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says a military response to the ongoing Ottawa protest against COVID-19 measures is “not in the cards right now.” Trudeau says that one must be “very, very cautious” about deploying troops on Canadian soil, adding there has been no such request to the federal government.

Filename: n_Trucker-Protest20220203T1325

Companion: Trucker-Protest

Category: News

Time Published: 1:25 p.m. ET Wednesday, Feb. 2


Feds introduce rejigged bill to regulate online broadcasters

Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez introduced new online content legislation Wednesday after the first attempt last year died without passing before the election. The bill will make streaming giants like Netflix invest in Canadian content, but will exempt individuals who post cat videos and other personal creations online.

Filename: n_Broadcast-Bill20220202T1730

Companion: Broadcast-Bill

Category: News

Time Published: 7:50 p.m. ET Wednesday, Feb. 2

 

CORRECTED VIDEO

Conservatives vote Erin O'Toole out as leader

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole stepped down today after almost two-thirds of his caucus voted against him in a leadership review. Most MPs say they will now work to be a united caucus once more.

NEW Filename: n_NEW-Conservatives-O'Toole20220202T1900

Companion: Conservatives-O'Toole

Category: News

NEW Time Published: 7:00 p.m. ET Wednesday, Feb. 2

 

Breakthrough in Alberta border blockade, lanes open in both directions

There has been a breakthrough aimed at resolving the impasse in a protest blockade that has snarled cross-border traffic at the main United States border crossing in southern Alberta. Chad Williamson, a lawyer representing truckers blocking access to the crossing at Coutts, Alta., says they have spoken with RCMP and agreed to open a lane of the highway in each direction.

Filename: n_Trucker-Protest-Border20220202T1841

Companion: Trucker-Protest-Border

Category: News

Time Published: 6:41 p.m. ET Wednesday, Feb. 2


Manitoba loosens some COVID-19 restrictions

The Manitoba government is loosening some of its COVID-19 public health orders. Chief public health officer Dr. Brent Roussin says indicators such as hospital admissions suggest the current pandemic wave is at its peak.

Filename: n_COVID-Mba20220202T1625

Companion: COVID-Mba

Category: News

Time Published: 4:25 p.m. ET Wednesday, Feb. 2

 

Olympic champions named Canada’s joint flag-bearers

Canadian women’s hockey team captain Marie-Philip Poulin and short-track speedskating champion Charles Hamelin will carry Canada’s flag into the opening ceremonies of Beijing’s Winter Olympics. Hamelin owns three Olympic gold medals and Poulin two. Poulin is the third women’s hockey player to carry the Maple Leaf after Danielle Goyette (2006) and Hayley Wickenheiser (2014).

Filename: s_OLY-Canada-Flag-Bearer20220202T1010

Companion: OLY-Canada-Flag-Bearer

Category: Sports

Time Published: 10:10 a.m. ET Wednesday, Feb. 2

 

The Tokyo effect: Canada’s winter athletes motivated by summer counterparts

Tokyo’s Summer Olympics and Canada’s performance there less than six months ago inspired the country’s winter athletes heading to Beijing. They pick their favourite Tokyo moments.

Filename: s_OLY-Canada-Tokyo-Effect20220202T0900

Companion: OLY-Canada-Tokyo-Effect

Category: Sports

Time Published: 9:00 a.m. ET Wednesday, Feb. 2

 

Alberta premier, RCMP ask for calm after violence at U.S. border standoff

A blockade at the border crossing at Coutts, Alta., turned violent Tuesday after some protesters breached police barriers to join the demonstration. There was also a head-on crash and an assault. Premier Jason Kenney and the RCMP are asking for calm.

Filename: n_Trucker-Protest-Border20220201T1142

Companion: Trucker-Protest-Border

Category: News

Time Published: 11:42 p.m. ET Tuesday, Feb. 1

 

B.C. records highest ever COVID-19 hospitalizations

B.C's COVID-19 hospitalizations are at their highest level yet recorded, but health officials say patients who contracted the Omicron variant are going home in about half the time compared to patients with the Delta variant.

Filename: n_COVID-BC20220201T1952

Companion: COVID-BC

Category: News

Time Published: 7:52 p.m. ET Tuesday, Feb. 1

 

Ottawa residents, business owners feeling the strain of continued convoy presence

Ottawa remains at a standstill, as trucks and big rigs remain along major roads in the downtown core and many businesses have remained closed since Friday over safety concerns. Residents and business owners are frustrated by the anti-COVID-19 restriction demonstrators who have been protesting, and honking loudly, for days.

Filename: n_Trucker-Protest20220201T1832

Companion: Trucker-Protest

Category: News

Time Published: 6:32 p.m. ET Tuesday, Feb. 1

 

Freeland, Rempel Garner spar over cost of living

Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner accused Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland of being out of touch with the average Canadian as the cost of living skyrockets. Freeland responded that the Conservatives should apologize for refusing to support a bill to provide pandemic relief to businesses.

Filename: n_StatCan-GDP20220201T1600

Companion: StatCan-GDP

Category: News

Time Published: 4:00 p.m. ET Tuesday, Feb. 1

 

Bobsled pilot Justin Kripps goes for Olympic gold again

Bobsled pilot Justin Kripps of Summerland, B.C., wanted to keep going to Beijing in 2022 after winning two-man gold in 2018. He says a cool head is an important quality in a bobsled pilot.

Filename: s_OLY-BOB-Canada-Kripps20220201T1100

Companion: OLY-BOB-Canada-Kripps

Category: Sports

Time Published: 11:00 a.m. ET Tuesday, Feb. 1

 

Inside the ICU: Battling the Omicron wave of COVID-19

The Omicron variant has spiked COVID-19 cases in Humber River Hospital’s intensive care unit. Nurses, doctors and respiratory therapists all help out when a patient needs to be proned -- flipping them from lying on their backs to their fronts, which helps more oxygen get into the blood. It is a difficult process that respiratory therapist Mehul Delvadia explains the process after he and eight colleagues helped flip a patient.

Filename: n_Humber-ICU20220201T1000

Companion: COVID-Hospital-Burnout

Category: News

Time Published: 10:00 a.m. ET Tuesday, Feb. 1

 

Robot bartender serves up drinks at Games

The Winter Olympics feature several functional and entertaining robots. In the Beijing press centre, there's a robot bartender. Servers handle the transaction and a robotic arm does the rest - complete with emphatic shaking of each cocktail. The press centre also includes a calligraphy robot creating posters.

Filename: s_OLY-Strange-Olympics20220201T0915

Companion: OLY-Beijing-Scene

Category: Sports

Time Published: 09:15 a.m. ET Tuesday, Feb. 1

 

Alberta border blockade ‘no longer lawful’: RCMP

About a hundred commercial trucks, vehicles and camper vans continued to block a busy U.S. border crossing Monday in protest of COVID-19 health measures. RCMP said the blockade, which started Saturday, was no longer lawful and resources are in place to make arrests and tow away vehicles if they are unable to resolve the conflict in Coutts, Alta.

Filename: n_Trucker-Protest-Border20220130T2210

Companion: Truckers-Protest

Category: News

Time Published: 10:10 p.m. ET Monday, Jan. 31

 

MPs arrive on Parliament Hill amid noisy protests

Politicians from all parties arrived on Parliament Hill Monday for the return of the House of Commons, amid the noisy trucker protest entering its second day. The MPs expressed some partisan differences but were united in their desire to get back to work.

Filename: n_Trucker-Protest-MPs20220131T1803

Companion: Truckers-Protest

Category: News

Time Published: 6:03 p.m. ET Monday, Jan. 31

 

O'Toole calls on Trudeau to meet with truckers

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole is calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to meet with truckers who oppose a cross-border vaccine mandate. Trudeau has refused to meet with protesters who have surrounded Parliament Hill — some of whom have been seen flying Nazi flags and desecrating memorials — and says Canadians are united in stepping up to get vaccinated.

Filename: n_Truckers-Protest-QP20220131T1645

Companion: Truckers-Protest

Category: News

Time Published: 4:45 p.m. ET Monday, Jan. 31

 

Ontarians head back to gyms, restaurants as COVID-19 restrictions ease

Ontario restaurants, gyms, and theatres welcomed patrons back as restrictions from the latest pandemic-related shutdown eased on Monday, with customers happy to return and businesses hopeful they'd put widespread COVID-19 closures behind them.

Filename: n_COVID-Ont20220131T1620

Companion: COVID-Ont

Category: News

Time Published: 4:20 p.m. ET Monday, Jan. 31

 

Trudeau says he won’t be intimidated by protesters

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government won’t be intimidated by protesters who refuse to leave the parliamentary precinct until vaccine mandates and other COVID-19 restrictions are abolished. The prime minister spoke to Canadians while in isolation, both because he tested positive for the virus and for safety reasons while the protesters surround the capital. He says Canadians are shocked and disgusted by some protesters flying Nazi flags and desecrating memorials, and those individuals don’t represent truckers or the vast majority of Canadians.

Filename:n_Truckers-Protest20220131T1430

Companion: Truckers-Protest

Category: News

Time Published: 2:30 p.m. ET Monday, Jan. 31

 

Olympic speedskater Laurent Dubreuil's family ties important to him

Long-track speedskater Laurent Dubreuil of Lévis, Que., is the reigning men's 500-metre champion heading into Beijing's Winter Games. He hopes to become Canada's first Olympic champion in it. His parents Robert and Ariane were also Olympic speedskaters.

Filename: s_OLY-SPD-Canada-Dubreuil20220131T0900

Companion: OLY-SPD-Canada-Dubreuil

Category: Sports

Time Published: 9:00 a.m. ET Monday, Jan. 31

The Canadian Press

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